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Sea cucumber fisheries: global analysis of stocks,management measures and drivers of overfishing
Authors:Steven W Purcell  Annie Mercier  Chantal Conand  Jean‐François Hamel  M Verónica Toral‐Granda  Alessandro Lovatelli  Sven Uthicke
Institution:1. National Marine Science Centre and Marine Ecology Research Centre, Southern Cross University, PO Box 4321, Coffs Harbour NSW 2450, Australia;2. Ocean Sciences Centre, Memorial University, St. John’s NL, A1C 5S7, Canada;3. Laboratoire d’écologie Marine, Université de La Réunion, PO Box 7151, 97715 Saint Denis, Reunion, France and MNHN, 57 rue Cuvier, 75005 Paris, France;4. Society for the Exploration and Valuing of the Environment (SEVE), 21 Phils Hill Road, Portugal Cove‐St. Philips NL, A1M 2B7, Canada;5. World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Galapagos Programme, PO box 20‐10‐10, Puerto Ayora, Santa Cruz Island, Galapagos, Ecuador;6. Fisheries and Aquaculture Resources Use and Conservation Division, Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00153 Rome, Italy;7. Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB No. 3, Townsville Qld 4810, Australia
Abstract:Worldwide, most sea cucumber fisheries are ineffectively managed, leading to declining stocks and potentially eroding the resilience of fisheries. We analyse trends in catches, fishery status, fishing participation and regulatory measures among 77 sea cucumber fisheries through data from recent fishery reports and fishery managers. Critical gaps in fisheries biology knowledge of even commonly targeted species undermine the expected success of management strategies. Most tropical fisheries are small‐scale, older and typified by numerous (>8) species, whereas temperate fisheries are often emerging, mono‐specific and industrialized. Fisher participation data indicated about 3 million sea cucumber fishers worldwide. Fisher participation rates were significantly related to the average annual yield. permanova analysis showed that over‐exploited and depleted fisheries employed different sets of measures than fisheries with healthier stocks, and a non‐metric multidimensional scaling ordination illustrated that a broad set of regulatory measures typified sustainable fisheries. SIMPER and regression tree analyses identified that the dissimilarity was most related to enforcement capacity, number of species harvested, fleet (vessel) controls, limited entry controls and rotational closures. The national Human Development Index was significantly lower in countries with over‐exploited and depleted fisheries. Where possible, managers should limit the number of fishers and vessel size and establish short lists of permissible commercial species in multispecies fisheries. Our findings emphasize an imperative to support the enforcement capacity in low‐income countries, in which risk of biodiversity loss is exceptionally high. Solutions for greater resilience of sea cucumber stocks must be embedded within those for poverty reduction and alternative livelihood options.
Keywords:Beche‐de‐mer  ecosystem approach  fisheries stocks  invertebrate  regulatory measures  resource management
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